Provenance is the history of ownership of an object, beginning with the artist and date of execution, and moving forward to the present day. The Johnson Museum’s Provenance Research Project focuses specifically on investigating, documenting, and publishing provenance information for works in our collection, with a particular emphasis on gaps in ownership history for certain groups of objects. Building on provenance research first undertaken in the late 1990s, the Johnson Museum is committed to providing greater access to its collections through this online project.

In the recent past, resolving issues surrounding gaps in provenance has become a key focus for cultural institutions. New information regarding the Nazis’ systematic looting of art during 1933–45 has come to light as documents related to World War II were declassified in the 1990s, and the fall of Communism allowed for greater access to international archives. Likewise, with the 1970 ratification of the UNESCO Convention to prevent and end illicit trade in antiquities and archeological materials, resources and protocols were developed to help both source countries and collectors protect and preserve cultural patrimony from illegal looting.

Through this portal the Johnson Museum will publish provenance information for accessioned objects in our collection, furthering our mission of stewardship and collections research. Complete provenance is the exception, not the rule. It is rare to have complete provenance for an object, particularly for works hundreds of years old. Missing information may be due to lost or destroyed documentation, forgotten oral histories, or a good-faith gift or purchase made without any record of the exchange. The inclusion of a work on this portal does not necessarily mean it is problematic. It may be listed because it meets the criteria set forth in the relevant guidelines (please see Resources at right), and thus requires further research. The provenance information posted here reflects current research to date (updated 12 November 2013).

How to read a Provenance (+ use of footnotes)

The provenance format presented here is a hybrid of those used by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, and the Getty Center, Los Angeles.

Provenance is listed in chronological order, beginning with the artist and date of execution and moving forward to the present day.

The date range of ownership precedes each name and, if known, location(s) of owners are enclosed in brackets.

“Private collection” indicates that we know the work was not owned by a dealer, and can mean one of two things: (1) We do not know the name of the owner or seller of that work; or (2) we know the name of the owner or seller, but it is a condition of the sale or gift that his/her identity not be revealed.

Dealers, auction houses, or agents are enclosed in parentheses to distinguish them from private owners.

“Private Dealer” means that we know the seller was a dealer but we do not know his/her name.

Relationships between owners and methods of transactions are indicated by punctuation: (1) A semicolon is used to indicate that the work passed directly between two owners (including dealers, auction houses, or agents); and (2) a period is used to separate two owners (including dealers, auction houses, or agents) if a direct transfer did not occur or is not known to have occurred.

Uncertain information is indicated by the terms “possibly” or “probably.”

Footnotes are used to explain, clarify, or document information.

A few common formats for date ranges of ownership include:

1955–1970The work entered this collection in 1955 and left it in 1970.

1955–The work entered this collection in 1955, but it is not known when it left.

–1955It is not known when the work entered this collection, but it left in 1955.

by 1955–The work was in this collection by 1955, but may have entered it earlier.

–still in 1955The work was still in this collection in 1955, and may have left it at a later date.

n.d.An owner name with “n.d.” (no date) indicates that the work was in this collection, but precise dates are not known. It is known that the work was in this collection between the owners listed prior to and after it, though there may be other unknown owners in the chain of ownership.

1970The work was accessioned into the Johnson Museum’s collection in 1970 and is still in the collection.

Nazi-Era Provenance Research

Brief background

From 1933 until 1945, the Nazis looted an extraordinary amount of art from across Europe, focusing on collections and objects that particularly aligned with their ideology. Although the cultural branches of the Allied Forces returned much of it shortly after the war, unfortunately, thousands of works were lost, destroyed, or sold on the art market. With increased access to archival materials, World War II survivors and their families have come forward seeking return of, or compensation for, these objects.

To help member institutions with these issues, the Association of Art Museum Directors (AAMD) and American Alliance of Museums (AAM), in conjunction with the Presidential Advisory Commission on Holocaust Assets in the United States, established guidelines in 1998 and 1999 to assist with the difficult and time-consuming work of provenance research. Please find links to these documents under Guidelines and Procedures: Nazi Era Provenance, on the right-hand side of this page.

Criteria and methods

Building on provenance research undertaken by the Museum in the late 1990s, the Johnson Museum is reviewing its collection according to the criteria set forth in AAM’s Recommended Procedures for Providing Information to the Public about Objects Transferred in Europe During the Nazi Era:

1. Identify all objects: a. created before 1946 and acquired after 1932; b. that underwent a change of ownership between 1932 and 1946; and c. that were or might reasonably be thought to have been in continental Europe between those dates (hereafter, "covered objects").

2. If unable to determine whether an object fits one or more of the three criteria above, it should still be treated as a covered object.

3. Initial research should focus on Judaica and uniquely identifiable European works of art.

N.B. It does not appear that the Museum holds any Judaica at this time. A thorough review of all the classifications of objects will enable us to confirm or update this information accordingly.

Fact sheets for the covered objects are posted at right as HFJ Covered Object Fact Sheets. Each fact sheet includes 20 categories of information considered by AAM and AAMD as critical for identification purposes. Not all entries are complete, but the information listed has been confirmed. They will be updated should new information become available. These same works are also cross-posted on AAM’s Nazi-Era Provenance Internet Portal.

Ancient Art and Archeological Materials Provenance Research

Brief background

In 1970, UNESCO adopted and ratified the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import and Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property ("1970 UNESCO Convention"), to counter widespread, long-term looting and illicit trade in cultural property. The 1970 UNESCO Convention remains the key instrument in the fight against looted and stolen patrimony. (For an in-depth discussion of the ethics surrounding cultural patrimony, see Kate Fitz Gibbon, “Chronology of Cultural Property Legislation” in Who Owns the Past?, 3-7.)

Although the United States was involved in drafting and negotiating the 1970 UNESCO Convention, it was not until 1983 that Congress passed, and the President signed into law, the Convention on Cultural Property Implementation Act (“CIPA”), effecting Articles 7(b)(1) and 9 of the 1970 UNESCO Convention. CIPA allows the President or an appointee to set bilateral agreements or emergency unilateral restrictions as recommended by the Cultural Property Advisory Committee (“CPAC”) after CPAC vets applications from source countries. Based on the Department of State’s current chart of import restrictions, AAM, AAMD, and US cultural institutions prefer to use 1970, specifically November 17, 1970, as the critical date in provenance research.

Criteria and methods

The Johnson Museum is reviewing its collections according to the criteria set forth by AAMD in their 2013 revised guidelines, as excerpted below. The complete guidelines can be found under the Guidelines and Resources page of this website:

1. Definitions:

a. “ ‘Archaeological material’ means an object of cultural significance created in antiquity and discovered on land, below ground, or under water as a result of scientific or clandestine excavation, exploration, or digging activities or inadvertently as a result of other activities;b. ‘Ancient art’ means a work of art created in antiquity that is not archaeological material;c. ‘1970’ means November 17, 1970;d. ‘2008’ means June 4, 2008; ande. ‘Work’ means an object of archaeological material or a work of ancient art.”

2. Guidelines:

“Member museums normally should not acquire a Work unless provenance research substantiates that the Work was outside its country of probable modern discovery before 1970 or was legally exported from its probable country of modern discovery after 1970.”

Despite best efforts and careful due diligence as set forth in Section III, A-D, it may not be possible to obtain complete and documented provenance for an object. AAMD takes this into consideration, and carves out specific exemptions, which allow for the acquisition of the Work via an “informed judgment” based on “cumulative facts and circumstances” as set forth in Section III, F, particularly if it is a gift or bequest and, if prior to 2008, any of the following were true: the intention of donation following long-term loan was documented and signed; or the expectation of donation was documented or “memorialized” by the museum; or a fractional interest in the Work was acquired via gift, bequest, or purchase. AAMD also lists specific requirements for publishing in Section III, G-I, including posting of Works on the AAMD Object Registry, and for handling potential ownership claims from third-parties.

3. Categories

The Johnson Museum is committed to researching and posting its relevant Works, beginning with those acquired through purchase, gift, bequest, or exchange, from 2008 to present, and relevant exemptions, if necessary; followed by Works acquired through purchase, gift, bequest, or exchange, from 1970 to 2008; and finally Works acquired through purchase, gift, bequest, or exchange, before 1970.

4. Format

Initially, works will be posted at right in basic spreadsheet format (HFJ Covered Objects Spreadsheets), with images whenever possible. More detailed fact sheets will be posted at right, following additional research (HFJ Covered Object Fact Sheets). Each fact sheet includes 16 categories of information considered by AAMD as critical for identification purposes.

Not all entries are complete, but the information listed has been confirmed. The entries will be updated should new information become available. These same works will also be cross-posted on AAMD’s Object Registry: New Acquisitions of Archaeological Material and Works of Ancient Art.

Contact

The Johnson Museum welcomes public input and relevant information in our
ongoing research efforts. Should you have questions or concerns, please e-mail us.